1 / 62

World War II

World War II. BW-March 3, 2014. LG- Students will be able to analyze the causes of World War II. Essential Question-How did the U.S. rise to power in era of WWII.

Download Presentation

World War II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. World War II

  2. BW-March 3, 2014 • LG- Students will be able to analyze the causes of World War II. • Essential Question-How did the U.S. rise to power in era of WWII. • According to the Cartoon, should the US enter WWII? Please justify your answer with information from the chart provided on your handout.

  3. AGENDA • BW- analysis of picture • Video- From Isolation to Intervention; students will write down definitions within their packet. • Quiz- 5 questions on Video • What Should Delano Do???? Speech Prompt/Exit Ticket

  4. Causes of US entering WWII Japanese Imperialism – US economic sanctions against Japan to protest aggression German Sub Attacks on US naval destroyers while escorting British ships Military Support of Allies -Neutrality Act and Lend-Lease allow US to supply Britain with war goods December 7, 1941 Japan attacks Pearl Harbor US Enters WWII December 8, 1941

  5. Allies Great Britain France Soviet Union (after 6/1941) U.S. (after 12/1941) Plus many smaller European nations Axis Powers Germany Italy Japan Allies v. Axis Powers

  6. Pearl Harbor • Japan was working on expanding empire throughout the Pacific • The U.S. had a trade embargo on Japan to try and deter Japan from invading countries • U.S. was able to intercept and break Japan's secret codes • Intercepted the code about Pearl Harbor - sent the message on a slower telegram (by accident) to warn U.S. Navy about attack

  7. Pearl Harbor Continued It was a Sunday morning - U.S. military was taken off guard 2 full blown attacks on Pearl Harbor December 7, 1941 Impact/Damage on U.S. • o2,400 U.S. military and civilians lost their lives • o1,178 U.S. military and civilians wounded • o18 ships and 350 planes sunk or damaged

  8. Pearl Harbor Continued • Japan viewed as a stunning victory • December 8, 1941, U.S. declares war on Japan • December 11, 1941, Germany and Italy declare war on U.S.

  9. Battle of the Atlantic • 1939 – 1945 (Jan. 1942 – July 1943 were decisive) • German U-Boats were sinking unprotected U.S. and other Allies' merchant ships • Allies began using convoys to protect ships • The Allies also used a sonar system to detect German U-Boats • The Germans were very successful in the beginning, but by mid - 1943, the Allies had the upper hand

  10. "The Battle of the Atlantic was the only thing that really frightened me" - Winston Churchill.

  11. Battle of Stalingrad (June 1941 – January 31, 1943) • Germans violated nonaggression pact with Soviet Union and attacked • Hitler hoped to captured Soviet oil fields • Germans nearly won (controlled 9/10 of the city) • Winter of 1943 hit

  12. Battle of Stalingrad cont… • Hitler forced Germans to stay put • Soviets used to their advantage and won • Soviets lost 1,100,000 people in this battle • Turning point in WWII • From that point on, Soviet army began to move westward towards Germany

  13. Normandy Invasion (D-Day) • June 6, 1944 • During this time, Soviet Union was pushing into Poland and Allies were pushing North in Italy • Generals Dwight D. Eisenhower and George Patton influential in leading attack • 3 million ally troops to attack

  14. Normandy Invasion cont. D – Day Ø60 mile stretch of beach Ø156,000 troops Ø4,000 landing craft Ø600 warships Ø11,000 planes ØLargest land-sea-air operation in history ØOmaha beach known as one of the most brutal areas

  15. The D-Day Museum in Portsmouth, England claims a total of 2,500 Allied troops died, while German forces suffered between 4,000 and 9,000 total casualties on D-Day. The Heritage Foundation in the U.S. claims 4,900 U.S. dead on D-Day The U.S. Army Center of Military History cites a total casualty figure for U.S. forces at 6,036. This number combines dead and wounded in the D-Day battles John Keegan, American Historian and Author believes that 2,500 Americans died along with 3,000 British and Canadian troops on D-Day By the end of the of the entire Normandy Campaign, nearly 425,000 Allied and German troops were killed, wounded, or missing.

  16. Normandy Invasion cont. The battle continues • W/in 1 month, a million more troops • September 1944, France was freed from Nazi control

  17. Battle of the Bulge • December 16, 1944 • German tanks broke through American lines (80 mile front) • Fought in Belgium - Germany was trying to capture Antwerp • Very brutal war - one of the most extensive of U.S. military (120 American GIs captured and mowed down by SS machine guns and pistols)

  18. Battle of the Bulge Cont. • Germans were winning in the beginning • 120,000 Germans died (also lost 600 tanks and guns and 1,600 planes – leading to defeat)) • 80,000 Americans died • Americans won, but were close to losing

  19. Yalta Conference • Took place February 1945 before WWII was over • Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill met in Yalta in the Soviet Union to discuss post WWII • Set up United Nations

  20. Yalta – “The Big 3”

  21. April 12, 1945 • At the beginning of his 4th Term, President Franklin D. Roosevelt passes away • The U.S. went through a major grieving period • Harry S. Truman, as Vice-President, takes the role as President

  22. The end of Hitler • April 30, 1945 Hitler and Eva Braun commit suicide (gun shot and cyanide) • Bodies burned in street • Cover of Time magazine May 7, 1945

  23. V-E Day • May 8, 1945 • General Eisenhower accepted a surrender by the Third Reich • V-E day = Victory in Europe day • 1st part of War was over

  24. Potsdam • July – August 1945 • Truman, (Churchill and then Clement Atlee) and Stalin met in Potsdam, Germany • Drew up a blueprint to disarm Germany and eliminate the Nazi regime

  25. Potsdam Continued • Divided Germany into 4 sections (occupied by France, Britain, U.S. and Soviet Union) • Berlin to be divided up in East (or Soviet Germany) • Set up the Nuremberg Trials to persecute Nazi leaders • Japan must “unconditionally surrender”

  26. Potsdam, Germany

  27. Nuremberg Trials • International tribunal court tried Nazi officials • Over 23 nations tried Nazi war criminals in Nuremberg, Germany • 12 of the 22 defendants were sentenced to death • 200 other officials were found guilty, but give lesser sentences

  28. Battle of the Coral Sea • Prior to this battle, the Japanese were winning every battle and taking over the Pacific • May 1942 - U.S. and Australia stopped Japan from invading • Japan won the actual battle, but the allies were able to stop Japan invasion for the first time • U.S. was beginning to use the Island Hopping technique to weaken Japan’s forces

  29. Battle of Midway • June 1942 • Admiral Chester Nimitz intercepted Japanese code • U.S. launched surprise attack on Japan at Pacific island called Midway • U.S. was successful in the Battle of Midway

  30. Battle of Midway • The Japanese lost 4 carriers, a heavy cruiser, 3 destroyers, some 275 planes, at least 4,800 men, and suffered heavy damage among the remaining vessels of their fleet. • American losses included 1 carrier, the Yorktown, a destroyer, about 150 planes, and 307 men

More Related